You are on top of the world right now; great clients,
amazing projects, and a well-honed portfolio. Yet, in the back of your
mind a humbling question looms. Can I do this forever? Do I have another
30 to 40 years of this in me? Being relevant as a designer for the
duration of an entire career is a daunting task.
Here's a humbling reality check. There will always be web designers more talented than you. Peruse sites like Cargo Collective, Coroflot, and Carbonmade
at your own risk. While inspiring it's also incredibly easy to become
disillusioned. The number of talented designers competing directly
against you grows each year. New ones join the workforce every year.
Just like you, all these designers are hungry for work.
Yet, there's a game-changing secret they don't yet know;
design 'talent' can only advance your career so far. If you want to be
more than just a flash in the pan, you need to diversify your skills and
evolve beyond just slinging the hottest pixels. If longevity is an
important aspect of your web design career, start preparing to expand
your talents.
01. Learn your graphic design theory and history
Can design history mash-ups work? In 2004, this teaser
campaign was one of my first attempts at bringing together two different
influences into a single art direction
Start with the design basics. How can you expect to master
an expertise if you don't know any of the fundamentals? Professional
athletes understand. All sports training starts with grasping the core
skills. Design proficiency isn't much different. To understand the
principles of design is to decode how design works. Want to pull the
strings in your audiences' brain? Learn the underlying patterns to the
craft. If terms like 'repetition and variation', 'contrast', 'rhythm',
'balance' are foreign to you, it might be time to hit the books.
If you have a strong understanding of design history, you
now have a mobile library of inspiration (i.e. your brain) to always
draw from. Pull from this knowledge with purpose. Don't stumble through a
historical design style without an understanding of how and why it
originated.
When your art director tells you she wants to see Paul Rand mashed with The Designers Republic,
you'll have a frame of reference. Your ability to understanding the
AD's point-of-reference and solve their problem visually will ensure you
will stay on the top of the list of their favourite designers to work
with.
02. Generate ideas
Get your nose out of Photoshop and read these three books. It will provide a much wider view of the design industry
Need to create ideas? Don't stare at a blank computer
screen. Successful designers learn how to generate concepts and avoid
jumping into Photoshop too early.
First, articulate the design problem. Don't have a creative
brief? Learn to write one. Provided a poor brief? Make it better. Don't
be afraid to ask more questions to ensure you feel empowered to truly
tackle the problem. Take ownership.
Once you are prepared, plan, moderate, or participate in a quantity-not-quality brainstorming session.
Chop up a large challenge into smaller tasks. Sometimes, a 15-minute
focused pow-wow will help beat a two hour session. Only after the
session should any ideas end up on the cutting room floor.
For the ideas that survive, don't be afraid to sketch until a
solution become clearer. Sketching doesn't have to be pretty, either.
Some designers pour over theirs, meticulously solving every element on
the page before moving to the screen. Others make them loose, rough, and
fast. Regardless, test and tweak ideas quickly. Moving through a volume
of ideas rapidly before settling on a desired solution will take your
design in a favourable direction faster.
Need more techniques for your idea toolbox? I'd recommend Graphic Design Thinking: Beyond Brainstorming.
Focused on real-life case studies, it showcases outcome based tactics
that designers can employ to gather information and generate ideas to
solve many different types of design problems.
03. Sell your work
Confidently selling ideas is crucial. Here, your author
humbly attempts to explain a design concept to colleagues from the
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
While 'coffee is for closers', the spoils of design
successes go to those who can instill confidence in their clients.
One-on-one with your smallest client or unveiling new work to a
poker-faced 60-person committee, you must be prepared to establish trust
in how you talk about design.
Become accustomed to talking not about the surface-level
obvious, but the purpose in your work. Your design isn't 'clean', it's
reducing the cognitive load allowing for the calls-to-action to provide
clear pathways for the user. That typeface isn't used because it's cool.
That typeface is the right typeface because it's historical context
aligns with the content and is highly readable on screen.
If you can't talk elegantly about the work you create, you've left the door open for someone else to. Don't let that happen.
04. Become a better writer
Writing is hard. If you have trouble focusing while writing (like I do), I'd recommend IAWriter
Virtual workplaces ensure we will be communicating more
frequently in non-verbal situations. Until the full-body Star Wars
holograms become reality, the words you write need to inform, persuade,
and delight in your absence.
Writing is another form of creativity. The more you work the 'writing' muscle, the more you'll learn. Cennyd Bowles wrote a cracking blog post
providing editing tips for designers. His insights can help less
seasoned writers recognise the erroneous patterns in their writing. Be
comfortable turning the jumbled mess of thoughts in your head into
organised, written ideas. Your words become an extension of yourself,
providing additional opportunities to share your ideas when you're not
present.
05. Surround yourself with people more talented than yourself
Don't have any talented people around to inspire you? At least have some interesting toys on your desk to keep you company
"When you get the chance, surround yourself with talented
people, even if they're your 'competition.' You'll learn more from them
than you'll learn from 20 years of schooling."
Heather Shaw, web designer, California
Can you learn in a vacuum? You can't. If you don't work with
talented people that you can constantly learn from, think about
changing jobs.
If you are lucky enough to be surrounded by elite designers,
watch their habits. Study their processes. Your rate of growth as a
designer will accelerate. You'll be able to witness how successful
designers do what they do. No book or interview or online tutorial will
ever be able to replicate that.
06. Work alone/work as a team
Phil Coffman's Method & Craft website is an inspiring example of a side project brought to life
When you are on a team, can you successfully integrate with
the personalities and talents of the team? If you are a freelancer, can
you manage yourself and your projects despite wearing all the hats?
Being adequately prepared for both is an utopian situation. Very few of
us have that type of discipline built-in. Take small steps towards being
prepared for both scenarios.
The best preparation is to delve into projects outside of
your 9-to-5. If you work inside of a team, bring something to life on
your own. A great example is what Phil Coffman concepted and executed with Method & Craft.
If you already work solo, join forces with some like-minded
professionals to bring something to life. Look into local coworking
spaces or professional organisations where talented folks fraternise and
collaborate. New to working with a team? Learn to let go of control. If
you can learn to trust your teammates and earn that trust back, you'll
forge a strong professional bond.
07. Handle conflict professionally
Be choosy about where you mix friends and work. For
instance, my Facebook account is for friends and family but Twitter is
where I connect with businesses, colleagues, and clients
This industry begins to feel 'small' after only a few years.
It's incredibly important to perform your craft virtuously. What type
of reputation do you want to project to your contemporaries? Employers,
co-workers, colleagues, and clients; all of these roles in your
professional life aren't necessary one-time cameos. You will cross paths
with them again. If not, your interpersonal skills will act as your
proxy. People talk, reputation spreads and if you make a habit of
burning bridges, it will come back to haunt you.
You'll meet people who you won't see eye to eye with. They
might be your boss or your client. You might even manage one. As hard as
it might be, treat all of these people with respect. The best way to do
this? Be honest with them. Let them know that you disagree with either
their actions or intentions... but never disrespect the person. Business
should remain business. When you are doing it right, business should
never be personal. Even when you might be the one being disrespected.
08. Accept that you have limits
Work with people you admire. Happy Cog's SXSW party Cogaoke gave us a chance to collaborate with amazing illustrator Tom Whalen
Yes, you used to draw when you were a kid. Does that make
you the best candidate to create an illustration for a paying client?
Who doesn't like to take snaps with our iPhones and turn them into
nostalgic bits of memory via Instagram? Software doesn't make you a
master of lighting photography. Know that there are skilled people out
there with specific expertise. Thankfully, these talented laborers want
to work with designers just like you! Seek out these talented people.
Create a bucket-list of all inspiring folks that you must work with
before you say sayonara to your 9-5.
Copywriter and creative director. Photographer and art
director. Illustrator and designer. Together, each pairing strengthens
the work. Different talents can combine to create something that is
greater than the sum of its parts. These two (or three or four) talents
can push each other to achieve new levels of creativity in their work.
For SXSW Cogaoke 2, the Happy Cog design team reached out to a local
illustrator we respected. A few emails later, we were collaborating on
the new site and poster for the event.
09. Value making relationships, not just connections
Just because I have your card, doesn't mean we actually know each other
You'll never know when the next job or job opportunity will
show up in your inbox. The spoils come to those who take the time to
nurture their network. That includes past coworkers, friends you've made
at conferences, and the multitude of designers who inspire you. Reach
out to those you admire. It's not dubious if you have an honest interest
in the work someone is doing. If you are in this game to collect
business cards, your intentions will show. Someone won't have a beer
with you and talk shop? Spend your time and energy elsewhere.
10. Be forever curious
Make gathering design inspiration part of your day-to-day routine. LittleSnapper is an easy easy tool to help
"Whenever possible, practice new techniques, try new tools,
take risks, push the envelope - this forces you to challenge your
creativity, combats stagnation and can help keep you relevant."
Lawrence O'Toole, graphic designer, NYC
You've been blessed with the ability to create for a living.
Have you taken a look at what type of creator you are? Avoid being the
'hunter-gather' type, scurrying for inspiration in every new project.
Instead, think like an agrarian; cultivating and honing your talent and
influences over time.
Your design-garden should reflect your interests. I use LittleSnapper
to organise the digital bits that catch my eye. In my collection you'll
find print, photography, fashion, numerous web design patterns. Spend a
few moments tagging and organising these snaps and over time you'll
amass a respectable representation of where your tastes lie. If nothing
else, you'll have a fantastic reference library that will be curated to
your interests.
If you'd prefer something more tactile, start an analog collection. In Aaron Draplin's studio
you'll find a personalised horde of industrial metal plates and
long-forgotten packaging that reflect his commitment to fueling the muse
that speaks to him. Want to find your muse? Look up the local flea
market and go on a graphic design scavenger hunt.
Conclusion
"Find out about the world. Read interesting books and
magazines, watch intelligent films, listen to music by people who play
their own instruments and sing their own songs, travel to countries with
a different culture to yours and have as many meaningful conversations
as you possibly can."
Espen Brunborg, designer, United Kingdom
A career is like a slab of marble waiting to be turned into a
piece of artwork. Like Michaelangeo, who could see the form inside of
the unblemished stone, you can begin to shape your career in the vision
of your choosing. It takes thousands of infinitesimal decisions. Those
small choices compile to alter the course of your professional
trajectory.
Have faith that while possessing oodles of talent is
important, there are other valuable skills necessary in our industry.
Live life. Take risks. When shaping your 'career-sculpture', remember
that well-rounded design prowess will take you further down that path.
Words: Christopher Cashdollar
Christopher Cashdollar is creative director for Happy Cog.